Authors: Tess Sharpe
“There are three interviews,” I say. “Mina talked to Matt
Clarke, Jackie’s grandfather and her little sister Amy, all in
December. Mina dropped the case after talking to Amy,
because she got those threats. Something made her go after
it again in February, but I’m not sure what.”
“She was always bad at leaving things alone,” he mut-
ters. “She probably fi gured the risk was worth it.”
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217
It’s almost a relief, his frustration. It makes me feel less
guilty about my own.
“Did she ever mention Jackie to you?” I ask. “Even in
passing?”
“Not since you guys were freshmen. She was really into
fi guring it out back then. Remember? It was kind of creepy.”
“She wanted to know what happened. People were still
talking about it when I got out of the hospital and back to
school. She was curious,” I say.
“She was too curious,” Trev says, and his voice cracks on
the words. “She was fucking reckless.”
“You can’t blame her,” I say, and it comes out low and
shaky. “Yes, she was stupid not to tell anyone what was
going on. But it isn’t her fault. It’s
his
fault. He killed her,
whoever the hell is. And he’s going to pay. So are you going
to listen to these with me, or not?”
Trev looks at me with shiny eyes, and I can see it hap-
pen, the way he pulls himself together, seems to grow a
foot, his shoulders squaring. “Play Matt’s fi rst. We were
friends. Maybe I’ll catch something.”
I click on Matt’s interview, keying up my speakers.
There’s a bit of static, and then:
“Okay. You ready, Matt?”
The moment her voice fi lls the room, I’m fl ooded with
it, the pain and relief that comes from hearing her again.
Trev sinks onto the edge of the bed, his fi ngers knotted,
eyes closed.
Hearing her, it’s not the same.
But it’s all we have.
“How did you and Jackie meet?”
Mina asks.
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F A R F R O M Y O U
I force myself to focus on Matt’s answer. He has a deep,
slow voice, and he pauses between his sentences, like
he’s thinking carefully about each word.
“Our moms were
friends,”
he says.
“She was always around, you know? Girl next
door. I asked her out in eighth grade, and that was it.”
“That’s a long time to be together,”
Mina says, and I can
almost hear the encouraging smile in her voice.
“Yeah,”
Matt agrees.
“She was special.”
“It must have been really hard for you when she went missing.”
There’s a long silence, only broken by rustles and a clink-
ing sound.
“Yeah. It was horrible for everyone. Everyone loved
Jackie.”
I look anywhere but at Trev as the recording contin-
ues. Mina asks Matt about school, about his and Jackie’s
friends, about Jackie’s involvement in youth group and soc-
cer; ordinary, unassuming questions that won’t make him
suspicious. Slowly but surely, she gets him to open up to
her, until she’s asking about the weeks before Jackie disap-
peared, about Detective James and how he’d treated Matt
during the questioning.
“That guy’s an ass,”
Matt scoffs, an edge in his voice.
“He
thought he had it all fi gured out. I wanted to let him search my
truck, but my uncle Rob kept saying they had to get a warrant.
Detective James spent so much time thinking I did it, he didn’t
look anywhere else, and the case got cold. Everyone always says
that the fi rst three days are the most important when someone
goes missing.”
“But he let you go.”
“He didn’t have anything on me,”
Matt says.
T E S S S H A R P E
219
On the recording, a phone rings.
“Just one more question
before you get that. You and Jackie—you guys were, you know,
intimate, right?”
There’s another long pause when the phone rings and
rings. I can picture Mina sitting there, baldly asking Matt if
he’d had sex with his girlfriend, that calm smile on her face,
like she wasn’t crossing some line.
“I don’t think that’s any of your business,”
Matt says.
“And I
think we’re done now.”
“Of course,”
Mina says. There’s a rustling sound, and
then the recording cuts off abruptly.
I look over at Trev, and my heart jackknifes in my chest
at the sheen in his eyes. “We don’t have to listen to any
more,” I say quickly.
His face hardens and he says quietly, “Play them.”
I press Play.
Mina’s interview with Jackie’s grandfather is focused on
Jackie’s childhood. She doesn’t ask any questions about the
case, but once Jack Dennings starts talking about Jackie’s
teen years, Mina keeps steering the interview back to her
relationship with Matt.
I can hear the whistle of the six o’clock train downtown
as I grit my teeth and click on the fi nal interview—the one
with Jackie’s sister, Amy. As it begins to play, I realize the
fi le’s less than a minute long. Both Matt’s and Jack’s inter-
views were more than fi fteen.
“What’s that?”
a girl’s voice asks.
“I was going to record the interview,”
Mina says.
“That
okay?”
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F A R F R O M Y O U
“No,”
Amy says.
“I told you, I’m not supposed to talk to you.
Turn it off.”
“Okay,”
Mina says. There’s a shuffl ing sound, and then
the recording cuts off abruptly.
Trev frowns. “That’s it?”
“I guess.” I do a quick global search of Amy’s name
to see if Mina had transcribed the interview somewhere
instead of recording it, but all that comes up is the time line
document. “She didn’t put the interview in here.”
“What do you think they talked about?”
“Well, when I talk to Amy, I’ll ask her. She’s friends
with Kyle’s little brother, I’m gonna try to nail down her
schedule.”
“You do that, and I’ll call Matt,” Trev says.
“Are you still in touch?” Trev had never spent much
time with Mina or me at school. I knew who his friends
were, but I’d never been around them much.
“I’ve seen him a few times since I left for college. Playing
soccer with the old team, you know.”
“How bad was Matt into drugs?” I ask. “Are we talking
a little pot, or pills or . . .”
“Meth,” Trev says.
“Shit.”
“Yeah. But that didn’t happen until after Jackie disap-
peared. Or at least, none of our group knew about it. I mean,
he was defi nitely getting to a place where people were wor-
ried. His dad left when we were freshmen, and Matt got
into a lot of fi ghts after. The whole thing with Jackie just
kind of pushed him over the edge.”
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221
“Do you think he could’ve killed her?”
Trev gets up from my bed, walking over to my window
and pushing my blue curtains aside to look down at the
front yard. “Back then, I would’ve said no way.”
“What about now?”
Trev doesn’t say anything for a while, just stares out my
window, his jaw tense. “I have no idea,” he says. “Maybe
they were in love. Maybe she hated him. Maybe he killed
her. I’m not really trusting my ability to judge people right
now.”
I look away.
“I should go,” Trev says. “I’ll call Matt.”
“See if we can meet him tomorrow,” I say. “Maybe he
said something to Mina off the record or talked to someone
else about Mina’s interest in Jackie. Or maybe he did it.”
As I talk, I can lean forward on my desk so I can push
myself up and out of my chair. My back is killing me. After
the shots, it’s always worse for a day or two before it gets
better, and I can’t hide my sharp intake of breath when I get
to my feet too fast.
Trev turns at the sound, but I make it to my bed and ease
myself down belly-fi rst before he can move to help me.
“You okay?” he asks.
“I’ll fi nd Jack Dennings’s address,” I say, ignoring the
question. “We can go see him too.” I’m beginning to feel
desperate about all of this. I don’t even know how to solve
the murder I witnessed, let alone a three-year-old cold case.
I close my eyes. I’ve been staying up late rereading arti-
cles about Mina’s murder and Jackie’s disappearance. Every
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F A R F R O M Y O U
time I make an effort to sleep, I’m back at Booker’s Point
with her, and I can’t think about that. So I don’t sleep. Not
when I can help it.
But I can’t fi ght it much longer.
There’s a hand. Warm against my shoulder.
Trev’s hand.
I tilt my head to the side so I can see him. He’s watching
me, sitting beside me, and I don’t look away.
There’s a realization that’s settling in him, something I
think he’s suspected but tried to deny for months, if not
years. An acceptance that’s not begrudging, but hesitant. I
can see it in his face, feel it when he touches me.
“Your back hurts?” he asks.
I tuck my hands underneath my chin and nod. He rests
his hand on my shoulder, and that constant pressure, that
bloom of heat, is another reminder of how present he is.
How gone she is.
“Need anything before I go?”
I shake my head. I’m afraid to speak. Afraid I’ll do some-
thing stupid, like press into his touch.
I can’t do that to him—to myself, to her.
I won’t.
“Do you think she’s up there?” I mumble. The words are
half-lost in the pillow, and he has to tilt forward to hear
them. “Watching us from heaven?”
“I do.” He brushes hair off my forehead with his free
hand, and the backs of his fi ngers graze my temple.
“Must be nice.”
“Sometimes.” Trev keeps stroking my hair, a light touch
T E S S S H A R P E
223
that spreads through me like a warm blanket. “Sometimes
it’s hell, thinking of her watching everything and not get-
ting to be a part of it.”
We stay like that for a while, with her memory wrapped
around us. I’m half-asleep, eyes closed, when he leans over
and presses his lips against my forehead.
His footsteps echo as he leaves my bedroom and I tell
myself I’m crying from the pain.
48
ONE YEAR AGO (SIXTEEN YEARS OLD)
“You know, the whole point of being on a sailboat is to sail,” Trev says.
Mina laughs, and I can feel the vibration of it through my skin.
She’s resting her head on my stomach, and the two of us are lying
out on the deck of the
Sweet Sorrow
, Trev at the helm. Both of them
are reading. Trev’s got some paperback mystery that he sticks in
his pocket when he needs to get up and man the sails. Mina’s been
absorbed in the same hardcover about Watergate for a week, taking
precise notes in her journal. She props it on her knees, highlighting
passages as she goes.
I am content to lie here and listen to them call back and forth to
each other, their familiar, good-natured bickering more soothing than
anything else could be. We’ve been dead in the water for an hour, Trev
too absorbed to chase what little wind there is.
“I don’t see you pulling the rope things to get us going,” Mina says.
“They’re called sails, Mina. And I’m at a really good part.” Trev
holds his book aloft .
She squints at the title. “I fi nished that last week. Want to know
who the murderer is?”
“Don’t ruin it for him,” I protest.
“See, Soph’s on my side. Two against one.”
Mina rolls her eyes and turns a page.
T E S S S H A R P E
225
I fall asleep eventually, lulled by the sun and the rocking of the
boat—and by the pills I took before I got in the car this morning.
When I wake up, the sun’s sinking fast, and Mina has moved up
to sit with Trev. I watch them for a moment, their dark heads bent
together, legs dangling off the side of the boat. And I catch the end
of Trev’s sentence, still half-asleep and hazy. “. . . worried about her?”
“It’s those stupid pills they have her on.”
I freeze. They’re talking about me.